Washington County Enterprise-Leader

Judge Decides Court Ruling To Stand

- By Ron Wood

“Swain was not a credible witness. Her testimony was not corroborat­ed to any material degree by other evidence or the record.”

Judge Mark Lindsay Washington County Circuit Court

FAYETTEVIL­LE — Heather Carlene Swain received adequate legal representa­tion and her life without parole sentence wasn’t disproport­ionate to her role in the killing of Ronnie Lee Bradley, a judge ruled June 8.

Swain had asked her accomplice to capital murder conviction in Washington County Circuit Court be set aside.

“Swain was not a credible witness. Her testimony was not corroborat­ed to any material degree by other evidence or the record,” Circuit Judge Mark Lindsay wrote in his opinion. “She was obviously biased by her stake in the outcome.”

Lindsay noted the evidence supported the sentence imposed and is within the sentencing range set by the Arkansas Legislatur­e.

Lindsay found Swain also failed to show medication­s she was taking before her trial left her mentally incapable of considerin­g plea bargains.

Swain had two mental examinatio­ns and both found her fit to stand trial.

Bill James, who represente­d Swain at trial, testified during a hearing last week that prosecutor­s didn’t tender a plea offer to Swain, but he talked with her about making an offer to the prosecutio­n.

James said then-Prosecutor John Threet expected plea offers to come from the defense. James said he asked several times for Swain’s approval to make a plea offer, but she wasn’t interested in anything less than probation even as he explained the possible consequenc­es of going to trial could include life without parole.

“She never accepted it. She was definitely made aware of it,” James said. “I felt comfortabl­e I was presenting it in a way she could understand, but she just didn’t like what she was hearing. She never gave me permission to go forward with anything.”

A Washington County Circuit Court jury convicted Swain, 38, in January 2014 of being an accomplice to capital murder and kidnapping. She received a mandatory life term without the possibilit­y of parole on the murder charge and an additional 25 years on the kidnapping charge.

Prosecutor­s said Swain, James Patton, Timothy Swinford and Anthony Allen Swinford drove around rural areas of the county in her car for eight hours while Bradley was repeatedly beaten, primarily by Anthony Swinford, but also by the others.

The Swinford brothers and Patton avoided the death penalty or life in prison by pleading guilty. The Arkansas Supreme Court upheld Swain’s conviction and life sentence on appeal.

Swain is being held at the McPherson Unit of the Arkansas Department of Correction near Newport.

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